The HP Photosmart A626 is the middle offering of HP's 2007 Photosmart snapshot printer line. It combines the features and touch screen of the A826 with the small size of the A526. Unfortunately, it also has the same speed and quality issues that plague the A526, and for S$399, we expect a lot more. This printer is stuck in an odd middle ground: You can either go cheaper for the A526 and lose the features, or go more expensive and gain the print speed and quality of the A826.
Design
The A626 is very small and portable, much like the A526. Its black-and-light-blue body stand 252mm wide, 132mm deep, and 117mm tall, and weighs just 1.45kg. The entire front panel flips down to reveal four memory card slots and a PictBridge USB port; it also serves as the output tray. Opening the front panel also causes the input tray to pop open in the rear and the LCD to spring open from the top of the printer.
For more details on the A626's design, click on the image.
Features
Like the A526, the paper can't be stored within the body of the A626, so if you don't plan to use the printer for some time, you should remove the paper and store it in a folder or envelope so that it doesn't become coated with dust. (The A826 allows you to store paper inside the printer's body.) The input tray can handle as many as 20 sheets of paper, up to 5 x 7-inch in size (the A526 can only handle 4-inch-wide paper). The ink and paper options for the A626 are the same as those for the A526 and A826. HP estimates that the cartridge can print as many as 55 4 x 6-inch photos. HP also offers an ink-and-paper package that includes 120 sheets of 4 x 6-inch paper and enough ink for that many photos.Performance
In CNET Labs' performance tests, the A626 performed more like the A526; that is, on the slow side. It produced 4 x 6-inch photos at a rate of 0.65 page per minute, in line with the A526's 0.70 page per minute. It was slower than the Canon Selphy CP740 (0.92ppm) and the Epson PictureMate Dash (1.42ppm).We found the prints produced by the A626 to be very similar to those by the A526, as well. The colors were pleasing, but color blocks showed graininess. The whole picture needed to be sharper, too. The dark end of the grayscale showed lots of compression, so we lost details in dark areas. Overall, the image quality is fine for basic snapshots for your fridge, but we'd prefer something better for photo albums or framing.
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